Elk Park Ranch, Inc. v. Park County

935 P.2d 1131, 282 Mont. 154, 54 St.Rep. 293, 54 State Rptr. 293, 1997 Mont. LEXIS 58
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1997
Docket96-664
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 935 P.2d 1131 (Elk Park Ranch, Inc. v. Park County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elk Park Ranch, Inc. v. Park County, 935 P.2d 1131, 282 Mont. 154, 54 St.Rep. 293, 54 State Rptr. 293, 1997 Mont. LEXIS 58 (Mo. 1997).

Opinion

JUSTICE HUNT

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Appellants Elk Park Ranch, Inc., et al. (Landowners), appeal the decision of the Sixth Judicial District Court, Park County, granting Respondent Park County’s motion for summary judgment.

ISSUES

The Landowners raise two issues on appeal:

1. Did the District Court err in determining that the Landowners could not create twenty-acre tracts of record from a larger parcel by executing and recording a series of one-party deeds prior to the effective date of the 1993 amendments to the Montana Subdivision and Platting Act (the Subdivision Act)?

2. Did the District Court err in concluding that Park County was not equitably estopped from denying the Landowners’ establishment of twenty-acre tracts and from refusing to accept the one-party deeds of conveyance for the twenty-acre tracts?

FACTS

The facts in this case are not in dispute. The following agreed-upon facts and law are relevant to this appeal:

1. Park County is a political subdivision of the State of Montana. The Clerk and Recorder of Park County is an elected official. Elk Park and LeMont are Montana corporations having their principal offices in Livingston, Montana. The individual appellants are all residents of Park County, Montana.

2. Effective on April 6,1993, the legislature of the State of Montana amended the Subdivision Act, found at § 76-3-101, et. seq., MCA. One *158 such amendment changed the definition of what constitutes a subdivision in the State of Montana. The pertinent sections of the amended Subdivision Act that define a subdivision and that are material and relevant to this case are:

Section 76-3-103(14), MCA. “Subdivision” means a division of land or land so divided that creates one or more parcels containing less than 160 acres that cannot be described as a one-quarter aliquot part of a United States government section, exclusive of public roadways, in order that the title to or possession of the parcels may be sold, rented, leased, or otherwise conveyed and includes any resubdivision and further includes a condominium or area, regardless of its size, that provides or will provide multiple space for recreational camping vehicles or mobile homes.
Section 76-3-103(15), MCA. “Tract of record” means a parcel of land, irrespective of ownership, that can be identified by legal description, independent of any other parcel of land, using documents on file in the records of the county clerk and recorder’s office.
Section 76-3-104, MCA. What constitutes subdivision. A subdivision comprises only those parcels containing less than 160 acres that cannot be described as a one-quarter aliquot part of a United States government section when the parcels have been segregated from the original tract. The subdivision plat must show all the parcels whether contiguous or not.

3. The size of land defined as a subdivision in the Subdivision Act prior to said amendments was 20 acres; that is, if a division of land was 20 acres or more, there was not a requirement to comply with the Subdivision Act.

4. Furthermore, prior to and after the 1993 amendments to the Subdivision Act, a survey of land (other than a subdivision) was not required for division of land for sale if the land could be described as a 1/32 or larger aliquot part of a United States government section or lot. Section 76-3-401, MCA.

5. In February or March of 1993, prior to the effective date of the amendments to the Subdivision Act of April 6,1993, a representative of Elk Park and LeMont, namely Kelly Meyers (Meyers) and their counsel, Karl Knuchel (Knuchel) had informal unplanned meetings with the then Park County Commissioners, the then Park County Attorney, William Neis Swandal (Swandal), and the then Park County Clerk and Recorder. Knuchel and Meyers expressed to Park County the desire of Elk Park and LeMont to record deeds with Park *159 County of certain tracts of land owned by them by describing the land in separate twenty acre aliquot tracts. The Park County officials understood that it was Elk Park and LeMonfs goal to establish separate twenty acre tracts before the effective date of the amendments to the Subdivision Act, in order to allow them to sell the twenty acre tracts to third parties without being subject to the new amendments of the Subdivision Act requiring subdivision review, surveying and platting of tracts of 160 acres or less.

6. Elk Park and LeMont suggested that the land owned by them could be separately described by each owner all on a single deed, in twenty acre aliquot tracts wherein the owner would be both the grantor and the grantee (a one-party deed). The other methods discussed were to have a separate deed for each twenty acre tract using a one-party deed, using a single deed or separate deeds by the use of a separate cooperative third party as the grantee (a “straw man”), who would then convey the twenty acre tracts back to the owners after recording the deed or deeds.

7. The then Park County Commissioners and the then Clerk and Recorder advised Khuchel and Meyers that the legal opinion of the County Attorney would be required by them in the decision as to the type of deed(s) which would be acceptable to the county for recording.

8. Swandal, the then Park County Attorney, was consulted and his opinion was that there was no legal impediments to recording the one-party deeds and he advised that the deeds could be recorded. He did not think it was necessary to use a straw man to create the separate twenty acre tracts. In his opinion as County Attorney, once a deed describing twenty acres in aliquot parts was filed before the effective date of the Subdivision Act, that deed would be of record and the parties could transfer the tracts out in accordance with that description.

The reasoning of the County Attorney at this time was that Elk Park could create a fictional legal entity and effectuate the transfer. However, the County Attorney felt that although Park County could require the filing of separate deeds for each tract, it was more efficient to allow the transfer on a one-party deed.

9. Based on the County Attorney's opinion and the County Commissioner’s and Clerk and Recorder’s acquiescence in that opinion, several one-party quit-claim deeds were recorded by the various Landowners.

10. In an action filed on May 24, 1993, for a Writ of Mandamus against the Ravalli County Clerk and Recorder, on July 12,1994, the *160 Montana Supreme Court decided Rocky Mountain Timberlands Inc. v. Lund (1994), 265 Mont. 463, 877 P.2d 1018, holding that a landowner cannot divide a large tract of land into twenty acre tracts by executing and recording a deed in which the grantor and the grantee are the same party. The Court held that such a deed was not a transfer and therefore not a division. The Court did not discuss in the decision the concept of “tracts of record” as defined in § 76-3-103(15), MCA. Prior to April 6, 1993, tracts of record were not defined in the Subdivision Act.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
935 P.2d 1131, 282 Mont. 154, 54 St.Rep. 293, 54 State Rptr. 293, 1997 Mont. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elk-park-ranch-inc-v-park-county-mont-1997.